WO2011142837A2 - Apparatus and method for optimized acid gas and toxic metal control in gasifier produced gases - Google Patents

Apparatus and method for optimized acid gas and toxic metal control in gasifier produced gases Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2011142837A2
WO2011142837A2 PCT/US2011/001094 US2011001094W WO2011142837A2 WO 2011142837 A2 WO2011142837 A2 WO 2011142837A2 US 2011001094 W US2011001094 W US 2011001094W WO 2011142837 A2 WO2011142837 A2 WO 2011142837A2
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Prior art keywords
sorbent
gas
residence time
activated
system disclosed
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PCT/US2011/001094
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English (en)
French (fr)
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WO2011142837A3 (en
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John P. Reardon
Thomas J. Paskach
Paul Evans
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Frontline Bioenergy, Llc.
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Priority to EP11780931.9A priority Critical patent/EP2569078B8/de
Priority to KR1020127032843A priority patent/KR101894109B1/ko
Priority to BR112012029176-9A priority patent/BR112012029176B1/pt
Priority to CA2799283A priority patent/CA2799283C/en
Publication of WO2011142837A2 publication Critical patent/WO2011142837A2/en
Publication of WO2011142837A3 publication Critical patent/WO2011142837A3/en

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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D53/00Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
    • B01D53/02Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols by adsorption, e.g. preparative gas chromatography
    • B01D53/06Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols by adsorption, e.g. preparative gas chromatography with moving adsorbents, e.g. rotating beds
    • B01D53/10Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols by adsorption, e.g. preparative gas chromatography with moving adsorbents, e.g. rotating beds with dispersed adsorbents
    • B01D53/12Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols by adsorption, e.g. preparative gas chromatography with moving adsorbents, e.g. rotating beds with dispersed adsorbents according to the "fluidised technique"
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D53/00Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
    • B01D53/34Chemical or biological purification of waste gases
    • B01D53/74General processes for purification of waste gases; Apparatus or devices specially adapted therefor
    • B01D53/81Solid phase processes
    • B01D53/83Solid phase processes with moving reactants
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J3/00Production of combustible gases containing carbon monoxide from solid carbonaceous fuels
    • C10J3/46Gasification of granular or pulverulent flues in suspension
    • C10J3/48Apparatus; Plants
    • C10J3/482Gasifiers with stationary fluidised bed
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J3/00Production of combustible gases containing carbon monoxide from solid carbonaceous fuels
    • C10J3/72Other features
    • C10J3/82Gas withdrawal means
    • C10J3/84Gas withdrawal means with means for removing dust or tar from the gas
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10KPURIFYING OR MODIFYING THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF COMBUSTIBLE GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE
    • C10K1/00Purifying combustible gases containing carbon monoxide
    • C10K1/002Removal of contaminants
    • C10K1/003Removal of contaminants of acid contaminants, e.g. acid gas removal
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10KPURIFYING OR MODIFYING THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF COMBUSTIBLE GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE
    • C10K1/00Purifying combustible gases containing carbon monoxide
    • C10K1/002Removal of contaminants
    • C10K1/007Removal of contaminants of metal compounds
    • C10K1/008Alkali metal compounds
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10KPURIFYING OR MODIFYING THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF COMBUSTIBLE GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE
    • C10K1/00Purifying combustible gases containing carbon monoxide
    • C10K1/02Dust removal
    • C10K1/024Dust removal by filtration
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2253/00Adsorbents used in seperation treatment of gases and vapours
    • B01D2253/10Inorganic adsorbents
    • B01D2253/102Carbon
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2253/00Adsorbents used in seperation treatment of gases and vapours
    • B01D2253/10Inorganic adsorbents
    • B01D2253/112Metals or metal compounds not provided for in B01D2253/104 or B01D2253/106
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2255/00Catalysts
    • B01D2255/20Metals or compounds thereof
    • B01D2255/204Alkaline earth metals
    • B01D2255/2045Calcium
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2255/00Catalysts
    • B01D2255/20Metals or compounds thereof
    • B01D2255/204Alkaline earth metals
    • B01D2255/2047Magnesium
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2257/00Components to be removed
    • B01D2257/20Halogens or halogen compounds
    • B01D2257/204Inorganic halogen compounds
    • B01D2257/2045Hydrochloric acid
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2257/00Components to be removed
    • B01D2257/60Heavy metals or heavy metal compounds
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J2300/00Details of gasification processes
    • C10J2300/09Details of the feed, e.g. feeding of spent catalyst, inert gas or halogens
    • C10J2300/0913Carbonaceous raw material
    • C10J2300/0916Biomass
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J2300/00Details of gasification processes
    • C10J2300/09Details of the feed, e.g. feeding of spent catalyst, inert gas or halogens
    • C10J2300/0953Gasifying agents
    • C10J2300/0956Air or oxygen enriched air
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J2300/00Details of gasification processes
    • C10J2300/09Details of the feed, e.g. feeding of spent catalyst, inert gas or halogens
    • C10J2300/0983Additives
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J2300/00Details of gasification processes
    • C10J2300/09Details of the feed, e.g. feeding of spent catalyst, inert gas or halogens
    • C10J2300/0983Additives
    • C10J2300/0996Calcium-containing inorganic materials, e.g. lime
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10JPRODUCTION OF PRODUCER GAS, WATER-GAS, SYNTHESIS GAS FROM SOLID CARBONACEOUS MATERIAL, OR MIXTURES CONTAINING THESE GASES; CARBURETTING AIR OR OTHER GASES
    • C10J2300/00Details of gasification processes
    • C10J2300/18Details of the gasification process, e.g. loops, autothermal operation
    • C10J2300/1861Heat exchange between at least two process streams
    • C10J2300/1884Heat exchange between at least two process streams with one stream being synthesis gas
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P20/00Technologies relating to chemical industry
    • Y02P20/141Feedstock
    • Y02P20/145Feedstock the feedstock being materials of biological origin

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to processes and apparatus for removal of unwanted substances from thermally produced gases and, more specifically, to the removal of acid gases, hydrogen chloride and hydrogen sulfide gases, and toxic metal vapors such as mercury, and lead, from the same.
  • renewable opportunity fuels such as lignocellulosic biomass (“biomass”) and refuse derived fuels (“RDF”) from municipal or industrial waste are important feedstocks for future production of renewable power and synthetic fuels and chemicals.
  • biomass lignocellulosic biomass
  • RDF refuse derived fuels
  • Chlorine may exist in the ash as an inorganic salt, or may be bound to carbon (in organic form).
  • HCI hydrogen chloride
  • HAP hazardous air pollutant
  • Use of refuse derived fuels can also produce vapors of toxic metals if present in the waste feedstock, for example, mercury and lead.
  • biomass ash there are also several natural sorbent elements present in biomass ash (including common alkali metals, potassium, and sodium; also common alkali earth metals, calcium, and magnesium; and transition metal oxides, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide) that have affinity for acid gases at certain temperatures— usually less than the gasifier operating temperature— and also for toxic metal capture.
  • biomass ash including common alkali metals, potassium, and sodium; also common alkali earth metals, calcium, and magnesium; and transition metal oxides, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide
  • transition metal oxides titanium dioxide, zinc oxide
  • HCI acid gas
  • CaCO j is) ⁇ — > CaOQs) +C0 2 (Calcite to activated lime)
  • reaction rate for hydrogen chloride capture by calcium oxide is reported to be first order with respect to HCI (Li, M, Shaw, H, and Yang, C.L.,. "Reaction Kinetics of Hydrogen Chloride with Calcium Oxide by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy.” Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. (39), 2000: 1898-1902), and rate limited by surface reaction— provided internal mass transfer resistances are negligible (small particles, small grains) and an excess surface area is available. Kinetics for this reaction are reported in the literature (Shemwell, et. al. 2001, Gullet, et. al 1992, Li, et. al, 2000).
  • Limestone and dolomite are commonly used as sorbents in atmospheric circulating fluidized bed gasifiers.
  • the circulating fluid bed relies on the sand recovery cyclone efficiency to influence particle slip; therefore, because the cyclone has a fixed geometry it cannot modulate with gas production capacity to effect any benefit for controlling sorbent and bio-char particle size with gas production capacity.
  • the atmospheric system cannot modulate any parameter with capacity to maintain ideal superficial velocity for sorbent particle size quality, nor maintain downstream residence time as constant.
  • a common approach to the problem of removing unwanted substances such as chloride and acid gas is to inject finely divided ( ⁇ 40 ⁇ ) dry powder sorbents into the target gas stream (Shemwell 2001); alternately, a sorbent slurry might be sprayed into the gas with the sorbent in hydrated form (e.g., slaked lime, Ca(OH) 2 (s)).
  • a sorbent slurry might be sprayed into the gas with the sorbent in hydrated form (e.g., slaked lime, Ca(OH) 2 (s)).
  • the kinetics of chloride capture (for example) is benefited by having smaller particles to reduce internal diffusion limitations and improve sorbent utilization.
  • the objectives of the present invention address optimization of multi-stage temperature parameters to achieve the lowest achievable levels of chloride.
  • the first objective of the method and apparatus of this invention is to achieve lower net HCI concentrations than known post- combustion treatment systems and achieve lower levels than known atmospheric pressure processes on gasifier produced gas streams.
  • the second objective is, preferably, to employ non-activated granular powders.
  • a granular particle is defined as a particle larger than would be elutriated, but preferably commensurate with a Geldart type B particle. (Geldart n.d.)
  • the third objective of the invention is to use pressure variation to condition the sorbent feed to an ideal particle size during its in situ activation in the fluid bed reactor. This occurs before the sorbent is passed to the downstream stages of cooling and residence time and final filtration.
  • the biochar produced by the present invention functions as an internally generated sorbent with natural minerals. It is pulverized and released in an ideal particle size to help capture acid gases, or prevent the release of the same.
  • a first embodiment of the apparatus includes a pressurized bubbling fluid bed reactor for conversion of granular sorbent and biomass materials into activated fine powders useful for acid gas capture in the remainder of the system. It further includes a primary heat exchanger to cool sorbent and produced gases at a preferred sorption temperature. A sorbent reaction chamber or zone provides gas and sorbent contact residence time. A secondary gas cooler can be employed if a second sorption temperature is needed. Finally, a filter chamber or zone designed to provide additional gas-sorbent contact residence time completes the general system overview.
  • Alternate configurations of the apparatus could include additional stages of heat exchangers and gas-sorbent contact chambers or zones. Other configurations could also include gas-sorbent contact chambers or zones with integrated cooling stages to create optimum temperature gradients in the direction of flow. Optimizing temperature gradients would maximize acid gas uptake for a given reactor volume.
  • Figure 6 presents the HCI concentration results in lines of constant residence time as a function of temperature, considering a constant pressure in the sorption chamber or zone (64.7 psi, 4.46 bar absolute).
  • Intra-particle mass transfer resistances may exist in a real system that may shift kinetic results and corresponding optimum temperatures, but the smaller and well dispersed particles— as are produced by the present invention— help to minimize intra-particle resistances.
  • Figure 6 illustrates the interplay between sorption kinetics that are faster at elevated temperatures and the equilibrium limitation that is more favorable at lower temperature. An optimum temperature can therefore be determined for a given sorbent reactor volume and operating pressure, which will have determined the reactor gas residence time and sorption kinetics of that particular combination.
  • Figure 6 presents HCI concentration results as isobaric lines for a fixed 63 second residence time in the sorption reactor as a function of temperature. Higher pressures favor a lower potential HCI concentration.
  • the minimum HCI concentration achieved at 50 psig is 30% less than what is achieved at 0 psig. Note that the optimum (the minimum contaminant) occurs at a slightly higher temperature with increased pressure.
  • a non-obvious aspect of the present invention is that it specifies feeding granular sorbents ( ⁇ 1000 to 2000 ⁇ particles) into the bubbling fluid bed gasifier in non-activated mineral form (e.g., limestone, dolomite, or other), rather than dry fine and active powder injection to the freeboard.
  • non-activated mineral form e.g., limestone, dolomite, or other
  • pressurized operation is preferable.
  • the many benefits of pressure operation are non-obvious.
  • increased pressure enables a lower final chloride concentration at a higher temperature as evidenced in Figure 6.
  • variable-pressure operation enables velocity control in the fluid bed to fix the residence time in downstream fixed volume sorbent-gas contacting reactors.
  • Elevated-pressure operation enables the use of pressure set point modulation to control the reactor's superficial velocity at a given gas production rate.
  • the ability to control the velocity with pressure set point modulation also provides opportunity to effect the preferred particle size and elutriation rate that is correlated with superficial velocity in the fluid bed reactor.
  • the fluid bed gasifier generates a gas product in an agitated bed of sand where the majority of the solids mass and temperatures generally exceed 700°C, and thus has an unfavorable equilibrium for chloride uptake.
  • feeding powdered sorbent into the fluid bed results in a less effective utilization of the sorbent— a powdered sorbent injected to the fluid bed produces agglomerates that sink and are discharged as oversize solids from the fluid bed media screen. If fine sorbent is fed to the fluid bed it does not provide the opportunity to elutriate the preferred particle size with grinding during activation, as is the case with the present invention, because of a tendency of the powdered feed to form agglomerates.
  • Fluid bed reactors are commonly operated at atmospheric pressure in circulating mode (higher velocity by design that is on the order of 10 to 20 times the minimum fluidization velocity and that employs a cyclone for sand recovery), or bubbling mode (lower velocity by design, on the order of 3 to 8 times the minimum fluidization velocity).
  • a fluid bed may also be operated at pressure.
  • the elutriation rate and particle size of char-ash products of gasification and injected granular sorbent will vary with fluid bed velocity.
  • By controlling the fluid bed pressure (by modulating input oxidant flow or by modulating a downstream pressure regulating valve) it is possible to control the fluid bed discharge velocity, and so controlling the sorbent and char-ash particle size is possible to a degree by controlling the fluid bed velocity.
  • a fluid bed reactor is designed to operate at variable pressure to provide for a new degree of freedom— otherwise not available to atmospheric fluid bed gasifiers— for controlling the sorbent and bio-char particle size and release rate by correlating with bubbling fluid bed superficial velocity for production of activated and internally ground particles that were initially fed as larger granular materials. Pressurized operation also reduces the lower limit of concentration (the gas-phase HCI equilibrium mole fraction) that can be achieved compared to atmospheric pressure operation.
  • Fig. 1 is a schematic drawing of a first embodiment of the present invention showing the arrangement of a fluid bed, heat exchanger(s), sorption residence time chamber or zone, and bag house;
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic of a second embodiment showing the arrangement of a fluid bed, heat exchanger(s), sorption residence time chamber or zone and bag house along with split stream of the bio-char ash/sorbent mixture to allow recycling to the gasifier freeboard;
  • Fig. 3 is a schematic drawing of a third embodiment which is similar to the second but the recycle stream enters just above the sorption residence time chamber or zone;
  • Fig. 4 is a schematic drawing of the invention including alternating staged cooling and resident time chambers or zones wherein the bag house operates as the initial gas-sorbent contact vessel and delivers the cleaned gas to a fixed bed sorbent-gas contacting vessel which may contain a high performance sorbent to address ultra-low trace contaminant or sulfide removal
  • Fig. 5 presents the kinetically determined HCI concentration results in lines of constant residence time as a function of temperature, considering a constant pressure in the sorption chamber or zone;
  • Fig. 6 presents HCI concentration results as isobaric lines for a fixed 63 second residence time in the sorption reactor as a function of temperature.
  • the apparatus of this invention is a system that comprises a pressurized bubbling fluid bed reactor (102) that internally converts a raw granular sorbent (101) and biomass materials into activated fine powders useful for acid gas capture in the remainder of the system; raw granular sorbent, biomass, and means for feeding the raw granular sorbent and the biomass into the fluid bed reactor (102) as a blend at (101) or separately feeding sorbent at (123).
  • a pressurized bubbling fluid bed reactor (102) that internally converts a raw granular sorbent (101) and biomass materials into activated fine powders useful for acid gas capture in the remainder of the system
  • raw granular sorbent, biomass and means for feeding the raw granular sorbent and the biomass into the fluid bed reactor (102) as a blend at (101) or separately feeding sorbent at (123).
  • the system further comprises a primary heat exchanger (106), a sorbent residence time chamber (or zone; throughout this application the term “chamber” may be interchangeable with the word “zone” which implies an area without physical boundaries separating it from the next area) (108), and, preferably, a secondary gas cooler/heat exchanger (110) and a filter zone (112).
  • Said primary heat exchanger (106) cools sorbent and produced gases and provides a preferred sorption temperature.
  • the sorbent residence time chamber or zone (108) provides gas and sorbent contact residence time.
  • the filter chamber or zone (112) e.g., baghouse or chamber with rigid filter elements
  • the filter chamber or zone (112) is preferably designed with an unusually long gas plenum (126), located below the filter elements (or bag filters) that provides for additional gas-sorbent contact residence time.
  • the sorbent (101) of this invention is generally granular limestone or granular dolomite in combination with internally produced high surface area bio-char or ash materials containing alkali and alkali-earth elements, various transition metal oxides (titanium, iron, and zinc oxides), alumina, and silica, other ash elements, and fixed carbon. Other added sorbents can be alternatively utilized or discovered for use in the same apparatus including zinc oxides, etc., preferably in a non-activated (e.g. preactivated) state.
  • the sorbent (101) must be in its activated state to obtain maximum contaminant uptake which generally requires heating and particle size reduction.
  • the heating and particle size reduction and controlled size release is the result of the use of the bubbling fluidized bed (102) of media (sand) in this invention. It is also beneficial to have the activated sorbent highly mixed and dispersed (not agglomerated) in the gas stream, which is another beneficial utility of feeding a granular sorbent with the fluidized bed reactor employed for sorbent activation.
  • Alternate configurations of the apparatus could include additional stages of heat exchangers alternating with gas-sorbent contact chambers or zones. Other configurations could also include gas-sorbent contact chambers with integrated cooling stages to create optimum temperature gradients in the direction of flow for the purpose of maximizing contaminant uptake for a given reactor volume.
  • the pressurized bubbling fluidized bed reactor ( 102) provides a combination of benefits to the invention.
  • the pressure operation improves kinetics for acid gas uptake and also provides the mechanism for gasifier velocity (and sorption chamber residence time) control.
  • the bubble agitated fluid bed reactor provides rapid heating for sorbent activation, sorbent grinding (attrition or comminution), and sorbent mixing and dispersion in the gas to be treated.
  • the pressurized gasifier can vary its gas flow while holding constant its superficial velocity (or pressure) and temperature. Since the optimum elutriated sorbent particle size is correlated with velocity, the desired sorbent properties can be achieved by modulating a pressure set point.
  • the preferred pressure set point is related to a desired velocity set point (V 8FB S P) and the current operating pressure (PBFB.PV) and the current superficial velocity (V BFB pv) (equal to the measured or otherwise known gas volume flow divided by the freeboard cross sectional area) as follows:
  • the pressure modulation to achieve the set point (PBFB.SP) m ay be executed by various means including downstream valve modulation (back pressure valve) and input flow modulation (increasing or decreasing the blast and/or biofuel flows).
  • Prior art has disclosed injecting previously ground powdered sorbents into the gas stream as a technique for capturing hydrogen chloride trace contaminants. It seems intuitive to inject powdered sorbents above the dense phase of the fluid bed gasifier, or even to inject the previously ground sorbents into the dense phase of the fluidized bed along with the biomass or refuse derived feedstock to achieve the objective. But in fact, the mixing action of the fluid bed when previously ground sorbents are injected into the dense phase functions actually forms larger lime agglomerates (of which a portion might be removed with the spent sand) instead of producing the desired sorbent particles. Further, the injection of previously ground sorbents into the fluid bed actually does not produce the optimally desired dispersion or particle size for acid gas capture.
  • the present invention instead contemplates injecting sorbent as a granular particle (rather than a powder) which allows the raw sorbent solids (including biomass particles) to have controlled release by attrition as it is activated. Feeding granular particles is preferable because, through the action of the fluid bed, it generates a stream of ideally-sized sorbent particles that are also uniformly dispersed in the produced gas stream.
  • the present invention provides for better lime utilization and better sorbent activation and dispersion by feeding granular particles.
  • the method of the present invention includes operating the fluidized bed reactor (102) to pulverize and activate the granular feedstock (gra nular non-activated sorbents and biomass).
  • the fluid bed grinds the granular particles while at the same time providing the heat needed to activate the materials for acid gas capture.
  • the fluid bed is operated at a constant superficial velocity, which may be 3 to 10 times the minimum fluidization velocity.
  • Superficial velocity in the dense phase is defined as the volumetric gas flow out of the reactor divided by the cross sectional area of the dense phase fluid bed (102). The preferred superficial velocity is determined based on correlations for particle size and elutriation rates and field verification.
  • An elutriated particle (a particle leaving the dense phase through the freeboard (104)) size is preferably 50 ⁇ or less, and most preferably 20 ⁇ or less.
  • the granular sorbents are preferably added in small bursts at high frequency intervals (usually 6 or more times per hour), preferably approaching a continuous feed, or such that no temperature oscillations are observed in the fluid bed reactor with sorbent input pulses.
  • the first cooling step provided by the heat exchanger (106) is essential to provide beneficial equilibrium (thermodynamic driving force) for acid gas capture and also to precipitate alkali elements out of the gas phase. These alkali elements may have been associated with the biomass ash rather than any added sorbent. Precipitating the alkali elements out of the gas phase as solids affords its beneficial reaction with acid gases and subsequent removal as a solid.
  • the first heat exchanger (106) is operated to cool the generated gas and sorbent mixture to an optimum temperature (usually about 750 to about 900°F) for acid gas capture in the gas-sorbent contact chamber or zone (108); and, preferably this temperature is less than required to precipitate alkali oxides and corresponding alkali metal salts (when reacted with acid gases), for example not more than about 1200°F.
  • An optional secondary heat exchanger (110) is operated to achieve an optimum temperature in the standard or modified (extended residence time) filter vessel (112), usually about 700 to about 900°F but generally a lower temperature than in the gas-sorbent contact chamber (108).
  • Example 1 The method of removing unwanted contaminants embodied by the present invention is exemplified by the following: Example 1
  • Table 1 provides the pertinent data providing a baseline against which the other examples will be compared.
  • the baseline assumes that a singular sorbent effect is employed. In practice, multiple effects are at play.
  • a bubbling fluid bed gasifier is operated at 1500°F by feeding an appropriate ratio of air and fuel.
  • Biomass is fed at the rate of 6500 Ibs/hr and contains 251.4 ppm chlorine (dry basis).
  • Granular limestone is co-fed at the rate of 1% of the biomass feed, or about 14.5 moles Ca/mol HCI. Gas is generated at the rate of 15,470 Ibs/hr wet (2.38 lbs wet gas/lb biomass as fed).
  • the initial HCI concentration is 100.0 ppmv in the freeboard, assuming 100% chlorine release as hydrogen chloride, and assuming there is no uptake of chloride by the biochar ash- even though it is known that biochar ash elements previously described have effective sorbent properties.
  • the desired superficial velocity is 4 ft/second (a target for producing the desired lime and bio-char particle size and elutriation rates). Therefore, the operating pressure set-point is determined to be 15.7 psig, as appropriate for the 6-ft diameter dense phase fluid bed, corresponding to 113.0 ft 3 /s volumetric gas flow.
  • the produced gas has a molecular weight of 26.3 Ibs/lbmol with 20% v/v water vapor.
  • the baghouse is not unusually tall, i.e., not much excess volume below the filter elements and the volume between the cooler and the filter is minimal.
  • Table 1 100 ppmv HCI initial; 14.1 ppm HCI final, 20% moisture gas, 2.068 atm (15 psig); 15,470 pph gas.
  • the diameter of the gas-sorbent contact vessel (108) is modified from 2ft to 8 ft, and the length retained at 30 ft.
  • the optimized temperature set point result is presented in Table 2.
  • Trend study for this example is presented in Figure 7.
  • the optimized case achieves 3.3 ppm HCI ( ⁇ 96.7% removal) with 825°F in the filter vessel (112) and 900°F in the intermediate gas-sorbent contact vessel (108).
  • the final concentration is about 33% higher if the temperatures are equivalent in (108) and (112).
  • Table 2 100 ppmv HCI initial; 3.31 ppm HCI final, 20% moisture gas, 2.068 atm ( S psig); 15,470 pph gas.
  • This third example demonstrates the benefit of added volume in the filter vessel by increasing its height by 17-ft beyond 20ft (the height typically be used in an apparatus set up as described).
  • This filter height extension could be done as a convenient way to increase sorbent contact residence time in the practice of this invention with or without including the intermediate sorbent contact vessel.
  • the dimensions of the gas-sorbent contact vessel (108) of Example-2 are retained in this third case, i.e., diameter modified to 8 feet, length the same at 30 feet.
  • Table 3 100 ppmv HCI initial, 1.00 ppm HCI final, 20% moisture gas, 2.068 atm (15 psig); 15,470 pph gas.
  • the optimized temperature set point result is presented in Table 3.
  • the increased filter vessel volume helps to achieve 1.00 ppm HCI ( ⁇ 99.0% removal) with 825°F in the filter vessel (112) and 900°F in the intermediate gas-sorbent contact vessel (108).
  • This fourth and final example demonstrates the benefit of increasing pressure to 102 psig, in the dimensionally equivalent system that was presented in Example-3; but, in this case the biomass feed is increased to 25,000 Ibs/hr to maintain superficial velocity in the fluid bed reactor.
  • Table 4 100 ppmv HCI initial, 1.00 ppm HCI final, 20% moisture gas, 7.94 atm (102 psig); 59,500 pph gas.
  • Table 5 Legend for acid gas capture using fluid bed activated sorbents and alternating cooling and gas-sorbent contact stages with final filtration in a novel filter.

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  • Devices And Processes Conducted In The Presence Of Fluids And Solid Particles (AREA)
PCT/US2011/001094 2010-05-14 2011-06-17 Apparatus and method for optimized acid gas and toxic metal control in gasifier produced gases WO2011142837A2 (en)

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EP11780931.9A EP2569078B8 (de) 2010-05-14 2011-06-17 Vorrichtung und verfahren für optimierte kontrolle von sauren gasen und giftigen metallen in durch einen vergaser erzeugten gasen
KR1020127032843A KR101894109B1 (ko) 2011-05-13 2011-06-17 기화기에서 생산된 기체 중의 최적화된 산성 기체 및 독성 금속 방제를 위한 장치 및 방법
BR112012029176-9A BR112012029176B1 (pt) 2010-05-14 2011-06-17 sistema de condicionamento de gás para controlar contaminantes traço nos gases gerados por biomassa e resíduos
CA2799283A CA2799283C (en) 2010-05-14 2011-06-17 Apparatus and method for optimized acid gas and toxic metal control in gasifier produced gases

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US20140369908A1 (en) * 2013-06-14 2014-12-18 John P. Reardon Apparatus and Method for Optimized Acid Gas and Toxic Metal Control in Gasifier Produced Gases
DE102013112069A1 (de) * 2013-11-01 2015-05-07 Universität Rostock Biogasanlage mit Biokohlefiltereinrichtung
CA2951724C (en) 2014-06-09 2017-06-20 Hatch Ltd. Plug flow reactor with internal recirculation fluidized bed
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EP2569078B1 (de) 2021-02-17
EP2569078A4 (de) 2015-02-11
US8580019B2 (en) 2013-11-12
US20110277639A1 (en) 2011-11-17
BR112012029176B1 (pt) 2020-10-27
BR112012029176A2 (pt) 2017-11-07
WO2011142837A3 (en) 2012-01-05
EP2569078B8 (de) 2021-03-31
CA2799283A1 (en) 2011-11-17
EP2569078A2 (de) 2013-03-20
DOP2012000287A (es) 2013-07-15

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